The Iron Table

Bryant Goodine

The Iron Table is a forum where Black men can discuss topics from their perspective. Topics range from relationships, mental health, emotional health, life skills, social awareness, etc. As iron sharpens iron (Proverbs 27:17), the idea is that men sharpen men. The sharpening can happen when men are willing to be transparent and proactive in addressing situations and circumstances that can tear us down when not handled. While this is geared toward men, the topics affect women and the family. As leaders of the home, we need to discuss issues that can be light on the surface but can reveal some profound truths in reality. There are many forums where comedy is used to skirt around issues, and while humor is good and needed, it can often be a crutch. The Iron Table is designed to be the platform on which men are forged into leaders in their homes and personal lives. The Iron Table is a place where the only thing fed is truth.

  1. Jun 30

    Dating Past Your 20s: The Peace He Really Wants Isn't Always Your Ass

    Dating feels louder than ever, but a lot of people still end up lonely and stuck in the “we’re just talking” zone. We sit down as four brothers and get honest about why so many men seem fine keeping things casual, what makes commitment feel risky, and how the standards and incentives of modern dating have changed the whole playing field. We connect everyday life and humor with deeper relationship truth: the way you argue matters, tone matters, and “peace” is not code for silence. We talk about what peace actually looks like during disagreement, why time and place can save a relationship, and how words can either empower a man or slowly tear him down. We also address a common misunderstanding head-on: a woman's credentials, income, and status might impress on a resume, but they do not automatically create attraction or emotional safety for men. Then we zoom out and look at the bigger system. When sex becomes easy to get without commitment, supply and demand shift, expectations shift, and overstimulation makes comparison feel endless. Our goal is not to shame anybody, but to name what is happening and offer practical ways to build real connection: humility, character, good conversation, and affirmation that feels sincere. If you’ve ever wondered why dating keeps stalling, hit play, then share this with a friend and leave a review. What do you think is the biggest reason commitment feels harder now?

    1h 15m
  2. Jun 4

    Snitches Get Cupcakes And Side Eyes

    Somebody’s partner pulls you aside and asks the question you never want to hear: “Do you know if he’s cheating?” Now what? We sit down at The Iron Table and put the bro code on trial, because loyalty is easy when it costs nothing, and complicated when the truth could blow up a marriage, a friendship, and your peace.  We talk through the real-life mechanics of getting cornered by direct questions, why “that’s none of my business” is sometimes a boundary and sometimes a dodge, and how to respond without becoming the messenger. We break down practical deflections that keep you honest while pushing the conversation back where it belongs: between the two people in the relationship or in counseling. And yes, we say the quiet part out loud: we are not going to hell for anybody’s lie.  Then we zoom out to the psychology behind suspicion. Why do people tap phones, chase clues, and beg for one last confirmation when they already feel it in their gut? We connect it to grief, denial, anger, and the slow path toward acceptance, plus the hard question that changes everything: are you ready to hear the answer you’re asking for? We close with a reminder that grown men can still affirm each other, show gratitude, and keep sharpening iron even when the conversation gets uncomfortable.  If this hit a nerve, subscribe, share the show with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find honest conversations about loyalty, accountability, and relationships.

    30 min
  3. Apr 21

    When Men Break, Families Pay The Price

    Two shocking headlines hit the country within days, and we couldn’t just scroll past them. We sit down as four brothers and talk plainly about domestic violence, intimate partner violence, and what’s happening when a relationship conflict turns into control, threats, and tragedy. The facts are heavy, but the goal is clear: name what’s real, stop pretending men are fine, and push back on the silence that lets pressure build until somebody explodes.  We dig into why it feels like these cases are climbing, and how social media and the internet can make it worse by feeding comparison, outrage, and reckless “get them back” advice. We connect the dots between stress, shame, isolation, and the way many men were raised without the words to process rejection, loss, or fear. When emotions stay trapped, they don’t disappear. They leak into irritability, drinking, stalking, jealousy, and that dangerous moment where logic shuts off and people make permanent decisions over temporary pain.  We also talk about warning signs loved ones can watch for, and what healthy interruption looks like: checking in early, asking better questions, creating safe spaces to vent without judgment, getting professional help, and leaning on faith when your mind is spiraling. If you’re in a losing season, we want you to hear this clearly: a loss doesn’t mean you’re a loser, and it’s not the end of your story.  If this conversation helps, subscribe, share it with someone you care about, and leave a review so more people can find it when they need it most.

    1h 10m
  4. Jan 20

    Bad Advice We Believed About Marriage, Money, And Manhood

    What if the most repeated relationship advice is also the most misleading? We take a hard look at slogans like “happy wife, happy life” and explain why outsourcing your peace to someone else’s mood wrecks connection. Instead, we make the case that happiness is an inside job and that two healthy individuals create the conditions for a healthy relationship—not the other way around. We share how that plays out in real life, drawing on John Gottman’s research about perpetual problems and the power of repair, friendship, and honest conflict. No fairy tales here: many issues are manageable rather than solvable, and that’s okay when respect and skills are in place. We also push back on the pressure to “just get married,” especially when marriage is treated like a fix for pregnancy or conflict. Slow is smooth and smooth is fast. Clarity, feedback, and readiness beat rushing every time. Money and humility get a much-needed rethink too. We talk about unlearning the fear of ambition, why accurate self-knowledge isn’t bragging, and how financial stewardship supports families and communities. On faith and generosity, we call for storehouse practices that actually meet local needs—rent, groceries, light bills—so giving becomes visible care. And we close with the tools that keep us grounded: vulnerability as courage, being approachable to correction, turning off the noise when anxiety spikes, and choosing therapy and brotherhood to break old loops. If this conversation sparked something, tap follow, share it with a friend who needs the nudge, and leave a quick review to help more people find the Iron Table. What myth about love or life are you dropping this year?

    57 min
  5. 12/20/2025

    Make Holiday Memories, Not Minimum Payments

    The holidays can bring out the best in us—and the worst in our budgets. Around the Iron Table, we get real about why so many men overspend this time of year, how social media and buy-now-pay-later schemes crank up the pressure, and what to do when you’re tempted to prove love with a receipt. We shift the focus toward intentional giving, clear boundaries, and the kind of everyday consistency that keeps December from becoming a high-stakes exam. We share honest stories: dental chairs and car repair surprises, the quiet win of a truly helpful gift, and the deep satisfaction of planning experiences that become family lore. Think candle-making dates, racetrack laps, and a professional stretch session for the back that’s been hurting for months. If money is tight, we talk about turning intention up—free rituals, thoughtful notes, favorite meals, or asking a trusted friend for intel instead of guessing. Listening is a gift; follow-through is love. Nostalgia weaves through the conversation—Temptations’ Rudolph, the Vince Guaraldi Trio, the plastic-scent memory of a first Nintendo, the soul-shaking tug of Polar Express. We explore how kids today face an abundance of information but a shortage of surprise, and how we can bring back a little magic with traditions that last longer than the wrapping. We also set healthy lines at home: agreeing on spending caps, naming non-negotiables (even about pets), and resisting the urge to start fights as an escape hatch from expectations. Pull up a chair for laughs, practical tools, and a reset on what makes this season meaningful. If this conversation helps you breathe a little easier and give a little wiser. Tap subscribe, share it with a friend who needs it, and leave a review with your most meaningful low-cost gift idea.

    1h 17m
  6. 11/25/2025

    Why Strength Is Not Control And Silence Is Not Weakness

    Start with the correction. That’s how trust is built—and how this conversation finds its spine. From there we face a brutal story out of Chicago: kids attacking a pregnant mother while her son tried to shield her. We talk about the collapse of a neighborhood code that once protected elders and parents, and whether the reflexive “Where are the fathers?” helps or hides the deeper problems. Presence matters, but presence is not just a body in a house; it’s boundaries, guidance, and the courage to say no when the internet says yes. We press into what healthy manhood looks like under pressure. Leadership is not domination; many men want peace, not power. Meekness is not weakness—calm is a choice, and restraint is strength. We share how men are punished for both standing firm and staying quiet, and how that double-bind can turn love into war. We also unpack provision as more than money. One of us chased a “pay it all” script until it almost broke him. The fix wasn’t a rigid 50/50; it was fairness matched to strengths, season by season, with respect replacing comparison to mom or dad. Then we ask when “figuring it out” ends and foundational responsibility begins. If people depend on you, your dream may need a pause—not a funeral. Stabilize, then rebuild with margin. We challenge the rise of consequence-free childhoods and how social media rewards attention over character. Consequences introduced early, with love, become guardrails later. Finally, we revisit success in a world where college isn’t a guarantee, predatory schools sold dead ends, trades are thriving, and content creation is real but unforgiving. The path is wider now, but discipline still wins. Pull up a chair at The Iron Table, where iron sharpens iron. If this conversation moved you, share it with a friend, hit follow, and leave a quick review with one takeaway you’ll practice this week. Your voice helps more people find the table.

    1h 8m
  7. 09/28/2025

    Walking While Black: Men's Journey to Validation

    What happens when a simple health journey becomes a battleground for racial bias? Bryant opens up about a deeply troubling experience that shook his daily walking routine at work. After losing 26 pounds through consistent exercise and better nutrition, his progress was suddenly threatened when a white coworker reported feeling "unsafe" by his presence in the building - despite his 24 years working there and wearing proper identification. The raw emotion Bryant shares - breaking down in his supervisor's office, feeling the weight of yet another racial microaggression - sparks a profound conversation about how men process trauma. The brothers at the Iron Table dive deep into why men often suffer in silence, internalizing pain rather than seeking support. They explore the concept of validation - what it means, how it differs for each person, and why it's essential for emotional wellbeing. Keith offers powerful insight: "A lot of men have been broken and stripped down to the point where they don't even feel or they're made to feel bad for needing validation." The group unpacks how society expects men to "take hits on the chin" without acknowledgment of their experiences. They challenge listeners to consider what validation looks like in their own lives - is it problem-solving together, simply being heard, or something else entirely? The conversation weaves through thought-provoking territory, from the importance of self-validation to how social media has warped our understanding of human connection. As Bryant contemplates returning to his walking routine, his brothers rally around him with both compassion and practical wisdom. Join us for this powerful discussion about racial awareness, emotional resilience, and the courage it takes to speak your truth in a world that often expects men to remain silent.

    1h 5m
  8. 07/27/2025

    Death Doesn't Play Fair: Why The Good Get Taken & Bad Left Alone?

    Death doesn't play fair. It takes the good, leaves the wicked, and rarely provides explanations. How do we make sense of loss when nothing seems to make sense? As we face an increasing wave of loss—from celebrities we've watched our whole lives to beloved friends and family members—the men of The Iron Table dive deep into grief, faith, and the questions that keep us awake at night. This raw, honest conversation explores why it often feels like good people die young while others get a pass, and how we can navigate the murky waters of mourning without drowning in despair. The hosts share personal reflections on recent losses, including Malcolm-Jamal Warner, while examining the biblical perspective on suffering. Does God take certain people because He knows their passing will wake us up to our own mortality? Is death designed to push us closer to faith or further away? Keith offers a powerful distinction between "questioning God" and "asking God questions," giving listeners permission to bring their honest pain before the Creator without feeling spiritually inadequate. Drawing from scripture, personal experience, and counseling wisdom, the conversation offers practical guidance for those who grieve. Danny reminds us that "the path to comfort comes through mourning," while Steve encourages listeners to develop a relationship with God before tragedy strikes rather than trying to build that foundation in the midst of pain. The hosts acknowledge that grief becomes particularly difficult when death doesn't make sense, yet even in those moments, community support and faith can sustain us. Whether you're currently walking through the valley of the shadow or want to prepare for the inevitable losses that come with living, this episode provides both comfort and challenge. Join Bryant, Keith, Danny, and Steve as they demonstrate how iron truly sharpens iron through life's most difficult conversations.

    1h 6m

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
2 Ratings

About

The Iron Table is a forum where Black men can discuss topics from their perspective. Topics range from relationships, mental health, emotional health, life skills, social awareness, etc. As iron sharpens iron (Proverbs 27:17), the idea is that men sharpen men. The sharpening can happen when men are willing to be transparent and proactive in addressing situations and circumstances that can tear us down when not handled. While this is geared toward men, the topics affect women and the family. As leaders of the home, we need to discuss issues that can be light on the surface but can reveal some profound truths in reality. There are many forums where comedy is used to skirt around issues, and while humor is good and needed, it can often be a crutch. The Iron Table is designed to be the platform on which men are forged into leaders in their homes and personal lives. The Iron Table is a place where the only thing fed is truth.